When European explorers went out into the world to open up trade routes
and establish colonies, they brought back much more than silks and
spices, cotton and tea. Inevitably, they came into contact with the
peoples of other parts of the world and formed views of them
occasionally admiring, more often hostile or contemptuous.
Using a stunning array of sources - missionaries' memoirs, the letters
of diplomats' wives, explorers' diaries and the work of writers as
diverse as Voltaire, Thackeray, Oliver Goldsmith and, of course,
Kipling - Victor Kiernan teases out the full range of European attitudes
to other peoples. Erudite, ironic and global in its scope, The Lords of
Human Kind has been a major influence on a generation of historians and
cultural critics and is a landmark in the history of Eurocentrism.